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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: stockman_scott who wrote (59906)12/4/2002 7:58:01 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
From: "Davis, Thomas"
To:
Subject: NYT: An Islamic Reformation
Date: Wed, 4 Dec 2002 14:56:36 -0800

The New York Times, December 4, 2002

An Islamic Reformation

By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

What's going on in Iran today is, without question, the
most promising trend in the Muslim world. It is a
combination of Martin Luther and Tiananmen Square - a drive
for an Islamic reformation combined with a spontaneous
student-led democracy movement. This movement faces a
formidable opponent in Iran's conservative clerical
leadership. It can't provide a quick fix to what ails
relations between Islam and the West today. There is none.
But it is still hugely important, because it reflects a
deepening understanding by many Iranian Muslims that to
thrive in the modern era they, and other Muslims, need an
Islam different from the lifeless, anti-modern,
anti-Western fundamentalism being imposed in Iran and
propagated by the Saudi Wahhabi clerics. This understanding
is the necessary condition for preventing the brewing
crisis between Islam and the West - which was triggered by
9/11 - from turning into a war of civilizations.

To put it another way, what's going on in Iran today is
precisely the war of ideas within Islam that is the most
important war of all. We can kill Osama bin Laden and all
his acolytes, but others will spring up in their place. The
only ones who can delegitimize and root out these forces in
any sustained way are Muslim societies themselves. And that
will happen only when more Muslim societies undergo, from
within, their own struggle for democracy and religious
reform. Only the disenchanted citizens of the Soviet bloc
could kill Marx; only Muslims fed up that their faith is
being dominated by anti-modernists can kill bin Ladenism
and its offshoots.

This struggle in Iran is symbolized by one man, whose name
you should know: Hashem Aghajari, a former Islamic
revolutionary and now a college professor, who was arrested
Nov. 6 and sentenced to death by the Iranian hard-liners -
triggering a student uprising - after giving a speech on
the need to rejuvenate Islam with an "Islamic
Protestantism."

Mr. Aghajari's speech was delivered on the 25th anniversary
of the death of Ali Shariati, one of the Iranian
revolution's most progressive thinkers. In the speech -
translated by the invaluable MEMRI service - he often cited
Mr. Shariati as his inspiration. He began by noting that
just as "the Protestant movement wanted to rescue
Christianity from the clergy and the church hierarchy," so
Muslims must do something similar today. The Muslim
clergymen who have come to dominate their faith, he said,
were never meant to have a monopoly on religious thinking
or be allowed to ban any new interpretations in light of
modernity.

"Just as people at the dawn of Islam conversed with the
Prophet, we have the right to do this today," he said.
"Just as they interpreted what was conveyed [to them] at
historical junctures, we must do the same. We cannot say:
`Because this is the past we must accept it without
question.' . . . This is not logical. For years, young
people were afraid to open a Koran. They said, `We must go
ask the mullahs what the Koran says.' Then came Shariati,
and he told the young people that those ideas were
bankrupt. [He said] you could understand the Koran using
your own methods. . . . The religious leaders taught that
if you understand the Koran on your own, you have committed
a crime. They feared that their racket would cease to exist
if young people learned [the Koran] on their own."

He continued: "We need a religion that respects the rights
of all - a progressive religion, rather than a traditional
religion that tramples the people. . . . One must be a good
person, a pure person. We must not say that if you are not
with us we can do whatever we want to you. By behaving as
we do, we are trampling our own religious principles."

Mr. Aghajari concluded: "Today, more than ever, we need the
`Islamic humanism' and `Islamic Protestantism' that
Shariati advocated. While [Iran's clerical leaders]
apparently do not recognize human rights, this principle
has been recognized by our Constitution. . . . The [Iranian
regime] divides people into insiders and outsiders. They
can do whatever they want to the outsiders. They can go to
their homes, steal their property, slander them, terrorize
them and kill them because they were outsiders. Is this
Islamic logic? When there is no respect for human beings?"

Mr. Aghajari refused to appeal his death sentence, saying
his whole conviction was a farce. But on Monday his lawyer
appealed on his own. Mr. Aghajari's fate now hangs in the
balance. Watch this story. It's the most important trial in
the world today.

CC



To: stockman_scott who wrote (59906)12/4/2002 11:38:30 PM
From: frankw1900  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Please Scott, will you edit a bit more? That post was mediocre by any standard at all - left, right, for or against US foreign policy, for or aginst the Iraq policy, for or gainst a green cheese subsidy for the moon - it doesn't make any difference. It was empty calories.